Joseph Francis Farah

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About Joseph Francis Farah

Joseph Farah runs WorldNetDaily, one of the most unhinged far-right “news” sites on the Internet.WND specializes in anti-Obama “birtherism,” wild accusations against LGBT people, anti-Muslim rhetoric and a huge dose of just plain lunacy, such as a six-part series that made the claim that eating soy causes homosexuality.

“It’s clear the federal government has no plans to offer protection to American citizens against future attacks by jihadis. Just the opposite. The government is facilitating, enabling and empowering them. That’s the policy. … It’s becoming apparent the plan represents nothing less than to terrorize the American public into total submission to government. … It’s the most divisive, subversive, treasonous policy of any president in American history.”
—“Americans, Your Government is at War With You,” Dec. 7, 2015

“In short, they believe they are wiser than God who created the institution of marriage and a union of a man and a woman.
Where does this lead?
God knows.
Polygamy? Sure.
Polyamory? Without question.
Legalized incest?
Who’s to say no?”
—"The Consequences of the Marriage Ruling,” June 26, 2015

“Just the practice of homosexuality is an abomination. … No civilization or culture in the history of the world has ever experimented with same-sex marriage, though there were questionable experiments with polygamy, always fraught with severe and negative consequences.”
—""Elton John, Meet Jesus," July 2, 2014

"What’s happening in our society today is nothing short of the active recruitment of children into aberrant sexual lifestyles. We once called this child abuse. But today it’s official state policy. The next step, which may have been unimaginable a few years ago, is to ensure there’s no way out for those recruits."
—"Illegal to Help Change Sexual Orientation?" March 19, 2013

"I understand what Obama is and what he is doing because I was once like him: I am a former communist."
—"I Have a Confession to Make," July 12, 2012

“[E]very mass-murdering tyranny in the history of the world started like this.”
—“Gun Grab: It’s About Freedom’s End,” Jan. 17, 2013

“‘Multiculturalism’ is much in vogue in the U.S. But if blind allegiance to a nice-sounding phrase of inclusiveness spells the eventual doom of our national heritage, is it really the right path to follow? … Is continued immigration into the U.S. by Muslims in the best interest of preserving our liberties?”
—“What Muslim-Americans Really Believe,” Dec. 7, 2012

Background

The Internet king of the antigovernment “Patriot” movement,WorldNetDaily founder and editor-in-chief Joseph Francis Farah is a onetime leftist who now who believes “cultural Marxists” are plotting to destroy our society. He zealously attempts to counter this with a hodgepodge of conspiracy theories, anti-gay rhetoric, apocalyptic predictions and Obama-hate apparently aimed at destroying our society.

As a long-haired leftist activist in the 1970s, Farah was arrested in Washington, D.C., during a May Day anti-war demonstration. He voted for George McGovern and Jimmy Carter, and he even claims to have served as a bodyguard for anti-war activist Jane Fonda. He says this radicalism — he now describes himself as a “former communist” — attracted the attention of "powerful and influential people" and led to offers of full scholarships at Antioch University and other colleges known for "grooming the next generation of leftists." But this was not to be his path.

After graduating from New Jersey's William Paterson University with a B.A. in communications, Farah made his way west in the 1980s to become a reporter and ultimately executive news editor at the now-defunct Los Angeles Herald Examiner. It was during this period that he felt the sway of two forces that would change his life: Ronald Reagan and Jesus. He cultivated what he describes as a “Christian worldview,” and says that becoming a journalist was his response to the question, “What would Jesus do?”

As for Reagan, Farah regards him as "probably the best American president of the 20th century." Even so, Reagan didn't go nearly far enough: "[H]e still left us with bigger government. He didn’t eliminate the Department of Education. He didn’t eliminate the Internal Revenue Service. He didn’t eliminate the Federal Reserve. He didn’t eliminate many of the most destructive, immoral and lawless institutions that knocked America from its pedestal as a shining city on a hill."

Thus philosophically armed, in 1990 Farah charged into his next California journalism job, executive editor of The Sacramento Union. Although the struggling 139-year-old paper's new owners hoped that fresh blood would help turn things around, circulation dropped by more that 25% as Farah dragged the already conservative paper sharply to the right during his 15 months at its helm.

Journalist Daniel Carson described the Union under Farah as “a mouthpiece for the fundamentalist Christian right, preoccupied with abortion, homosexuals and creationism.” Under Farah's direction, pro-choice advocates were described as “pro-abortion” and environmentalists were reportedly called “eco-fruities.” The word “gay” was reportedly forbidden, replaced by “homosexual” — and once, in a column by the late David Chilton, with “sodomite.” Farah altered a news story to call the National Organization for Women a "radical feminist group," according to Carson. A front-page story speculated about whether the confrontation in the Persian Gulf represented the political beginning of Armageddon. A column by Rush Limbaugh became a front-page fixture.

An exodus of editors, managers and writers ensued. “The feeling is it’s not really an objective newspaper anymore,” a former Union reporter told The Washington Post in 1990. “We didn’t go into journalism to work for some slanted publication.”

In October 1991, Farah resigned, and a little more than two years later, the Union closed for good. But Farah had discovered his voice, and that same year, he founded the Western Center for Journalism (WCJ), a nonprofit whose purpose was “to encourage more philosophical diversity in the news media.” As it turned out, that philosophy had little to do with diversity and more to do with sensationalized reports that furthered Farah's political ends.

One of the early WCJ imbroglios came after the suicide of White House Deputy Counsel Vincent Foster. WCJ funded and promoted a 1994 report by Christopher W. Ruddy suggesting that Foster had been the victim of foul play. One of Ruddy's claims was that the death scene had been staged by the U.S. Park Police, prompting a $2 million suit by one of the officers named. (The suit was later dismissed.)

Excited by the opportunity to inject his ideas into the national political debate, Farah and his wife, Elizabeth, founded WorldNetDaily in 1997 as a project of WCJ. It became an independent for-profit company in 1999, financed by $4.5 million in seed money from unnamed investors, and quickly became one of the most popular “news” sites on the Web.

The pages of WND are littered with jaw-dropping assertions, such as a six-part series claiming that soybean consumption causes homosexuality. It promoted gay-basher Scott Lively’s The Pink Swastika, which makes the baseless claim that gay men orchestrated the Holocaust. WND also identified the first “leftist” as Satan, and declared that Muslims have a “20-point plan for conquering the United States by 2020.” It has warned of the international elite’s secret plans to create a North American Union (a melding of Mexico, the United States and Canada), advised readers to invest all their assets in gold, and promoted myriad, if conflicting, theories about when and how the world will end. In one article, Farah said the world was created a mere 6,000 years ago. “I know what some of you are thinking: “Farah, what about the dinosaurs that were tens of millions of years old? How do you explain that?” Quite simply, I don’t believe it. Throughout man’s history, in every culture, we have stories, pictures and sculptures depicting dragons and leviathans and sea serpents. Are we to believe these were all concocted in man’s imagination?”

But WND's most enduring claim, by far, is that Obama is constitutionally ineligible to serve as president because he is not a “natural-born” U.S. citizen. The site has become a second home to Jerome Corsi, who continued to plug the “birther” line about President Obama even after the president’s “long-form” birth certificate was released. Corsi was also the architect of the “Swift boating” of John Kerry in the 2004 presidential campaign.

Through it all, Farah boasts of being committed to open dialogue that is free of ideology, using the slogan "America's Independent News Network." “We boast the broadest ideological forum of commentators in any news or opinion publication or website anywhere on the planet – and we will continue to do that," he wrote in 2010. "We think people should hear all points of view discussed openly and honestly."

Ironically, that column was written to explain why he was dropping Ann Coulter as keynote speaker from WND’s “Taking America Back National Conference.” Coulter, a rabid attack dog in her own right, had made the mistake of agreeing to address the “HOMOCON” [for “homosexual conservatives”] event sponsored by the Republican group GOProud, which has advocated for same-sex marriage and open military service for gays. (Coulter disagreed with both those stands, and explained why in her HOMOCON speech.)

In fact, Farah's opposition to gay rights was a major impetus for Taking America Back. He launched the event as an alternative to the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, which he boycotted because an LGBT Republican group was included. Although Coulter was not in the lineup, other far-right luminaries were, including U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), former “Saturday Night Live” cast member Victoria Jackson, former U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), anti-gay hate group leader and Christian Reconstructionist theologian Gary DeMar, and R.C. Sproul Jr., a mover-and-shaker in the theocratic Christian “patriarchy” movement and a prominent homeschooling advocate.

Farah has questioned Obama's Christianity, insisting that "Barack Obama is simply not a Christian, as he claims." In 2014, Farah called Obama the “enemy of believers— a tormentor of Christians, a persecutor.” “I believe Obama and the agenda he personifies have used abortion and homosexuality as battering rams against the Christian faith.” In later articles, Farah has blamed Obama for instigating the Black Lives Matter Protests, insisted that “Barack Obama appears to be doing everything in his power to spread the Ebola virus”, and even argued that Obama “actually fed and nursed and gave aid and comfort to Isis. He incubated the monster it has become.” Farah broke with highly conservative megachurch pastor Rick Warren over Warren's assertion that "Christians and Muslims worship the same God," calling it close to heresy.

Farah also has accused the American Civil Liberties Union of waging a war on Christmas: “They remind me of the terrorists in the Middle East…. The real target is not Christmas. It’s Christianity. Farah believes that apocalypse is imminent, as he wrote in January 2013: "You can see the world crumbling all around you. The economy is falling apart. Morals are breaking down. We face asymmetric security threats that can bring down the world’s greatest superpower to the level of a Third World country in 24 hours. The U.S. is not the great safe haven of freedom and security it once was.

"All of this is exactly what we would expect in the last days," he concluded.

The national gun control debate is simply more evidence of this, Farah wrote in a January 2013 column. "It doesn’t take a rocket scientist or a Ph.D. in history to know that every mass-murdering tyranny in the history of the world started like this," he writes. "They began with a government monopoly on force. Once that is established, the citizenry is no longer served by government, government is served by its subjects."

Farah’s own solution is simple: “Find a good reliable source of news — like WorldNetDaily.com — and be informed.” Buy guns — “more than you think you need.” And above all, withdraw your children from “government schools,” those “indoctrination centers” and “brainwashing hubs” run by “statists who seek to steal our children and make a mockery of the family.”

“There is no neutral ground in the spiritual warfare consuming this universe,” he advised readers in the final sentences of his book, Taking America Back. “Now stand up and join me in taking America back.”

In 2013, Farah wrote that the 9/11 terror attacks were a judgment from God and called for a 9/11 National Day of Prayer and Repentance. The event so inspired Farah that he has made it an annual occurence.

The same year, Farah turned his attention to Obamacare, insisting that it will “change the balance of power in the United States of America between government and the people” and that the “government officials would no longer be servants of the people, they would become their masters.”

Most recently, Farah has focused on demonizing transgender and gender non-conforming people in the wake of the Supreme Court’s marriage equality decision. “What’s happening in our society today is nothing short of the active recruitment of children into aberrant sexual lifestyles. We once called this child abuse. But today it’s official state policy. The next step, which may have been unimaginable a few years ago, is to ensure there’s no way out for those recruits.”